Sandra Harris looked up as the bell over the Dispatch Office door tinkled gently. Her
visitor was not expected today, or any day, for that matter.

Jebediah Whateley moved to the counter, took off his stovepipe hat, sat it on the
counter, and silently wrote a precise message on a telegraph slip. He didnt speak
when he looked up and handed it to Sandra; he didnt even clear his throat. He merely
glared at her and held the slip level without a word.

The dispatch operator refused to be intimidated. With a final flourish of her pen, she
completed her invoice and approached the counter. "How can I help you, Mr.
Whateley?" her pleasant voice wavered, only slightly.

"This is a dispatch office, Miss Harris, is it not?" the cadaverous man
replied. "I have a dispatch for you to deliver."

"I think I can manage that," Sandra returned, matching Jebediahs
sarcasm as she took his slip and payment.

Exact change, she noted. Good. She had no desire to keep the Whateley here any longer
than necessary.

Jebediah silently turned to leave, then frowned and squinted up at the ceiling. For a
moment, Sandra wondered at this, but then she heard it, too. The fluttering of wings. She
could make the sound out through the ceiling.

Pushing through the desks door and moving to the window, Sandra noticed that the
sky outside was overcast, and that shadows fluttered over the ground, irregular and quick.

Sandra had some difficulty making out the silhouettes overhead, backlit by the bright
noonday sun. But they seemed to be men... with wings. Huge white wings that fairly
glistened in the sun. Heading north.

"Even in Gomorra, theres something you dont see every day,"
Harris muttered under her breath.

To her surprise, Jebediah Whateley saw fit to respond to her. "Indeed not, Miss
Harris, indeed not. I believe that you should shortly be expecting a sizable increase in
business. Please see to it that my telegraph goes out to New Orleans before the
rush."

Donning his hat, Jebediah silently left the dispatch office. Harris looked down at the
telegram slip in her hand. It looked to be in some kind of code: a Latin derivative,
perhaps.

Max Baine would want to know what it said. And there were others as well that might be
interested. Nothing prevented her from selling the information twice, if it wasnt
critical to Sweetrock affairs.

Returning to her desk, Sandra industriously went about her work

Friday, August 9, 1878 - 10:08 p.m.
Four days to Doomsday

"I appreciate your efforts, Sandra," Max said. Harris fought down a blush;
few men other than Robert impressed her, but Baine had a certain way with people - men and
women alike.

"Im sorry for the delay, Max. But the Whateleys are tricky, and their Arabic
variant threw me."

"Thats quite all right," The Sweetrock leader examined the telegram
copy. "This is only a confirmation. There are other, more immediate, matters at hand.
Which reminds me... Walter?"

The hired gun stepped forward. "No word on Miller yet. Jane and Kerry are out
looking for him with a few of the men. They havent been able to find Childes or
Duvalier, either."

"Thieves, the three of them," Max grumbled. "And our lawyers? Any word
on the Gulgoleth situation?"

Walter shrugged. "No luck there, either. Grimmes lawyers are damn good; if
we let things stand, theyll take the site in court, and Elijah will move in by the
end of the month. Looks like were going to need the Siouxs help after
all."

"A pity that Applegate couldnt get here earlier," Max sighed. "How
much help do you think the Sioux are going to be? From what you said earlier..."

"They seem to have their own problems, certainly. But Walks-in-Footprints assures
me that the Sioux need to keep Gulgoleth out of Elijahs hands as much as we do.
Im just as worried about this as you are. If this goes down with half as much
bloodshed as we expect "

"I know, I know, Walter... Heres the way well play it. Rope in Jane
and Kerry, and as many others as we can spare. Well deal with Miller and Duvalier
later. Put Dr. Branson on alert and make sure weve got enough supplies set aside to
handle the wounded. Then link up with the Sioux scouts and head in. Its time we
nipped this in the bud - if its not already too late."

Turning back to the dispatcher, Max asked, "You have anything else for me?"

"Like Jebediah said, traffic is picking up. Ill let you know what I hear,
but all I can say right now is that it looks bad. All the outfits got runners bringing
stuff in here, but theyre using new codes every time. Ill do my best to crack
the ones I can, but "

"That will have to do, then. Lets go, people."

Friday - 4:37 p.m.

Screams of agony decorated the laboratory-warehouse.

Internally, the manitou that ran herd on Jacynth Ambroses organic shell reveled
in the destruction. But appearances must be maintained. It ran a hand over a nearby bank
of controls, and a strange gun - mounted on mechanical legs rather then any sort of
carriage - lurched out of a corner, tracking the rampaging robot.

Recently rebuilt, SUZY-309 was stronger than the technicians reports had led
Ambrose to believe. Snatching up another of her re-creators, Suzy cut off his scream and
his head with a single savage motion. All the while, a bizarre sound akin to gurgling
laughter issued forth from the raging automaton.

Lab-coated assistants ran for cover as Jacynths Soul Cannon locked on and fired.
SUZY gave out a scream that was almost human, and Jacynth focused on the sound. She had
never determined if rumors that the construct had a soul were true, but it certainly
reacted as if it did - as if it were feeling pain from the blast

Another beam of light cut into SUZYs flank from the other side of the warehouse.
Jacynth spared a glimpse for the sharpshooter, a white-clad scientist with a shock of
blonde hair, firing a huge hand weapon from atop the remodeled Death Bus.

The combined fire drove SUZY into a frenzy, pushing her back into the warehouse wall,
which partially collapsed on top of her. Rising from the rubble, she seemed to take stock
of her situation for a moment, hovering in place, still.

Perhaps her systems are recouping from the damage, Jacynth considered, just before the
automaton whirled around and crashed through the warehouse wall, fleeing into the
wilderness beyond.

Zarkov dropped to the ground with the agility of a man half his age, and strode over to
the Hellstromme representative. "Why in the name of Sam Hill did you order SUZY
reactivated?"

Jacynth glared at the impertinent man. "Because the Gulgoleth matter is
important," she snarled.

"Maybe to Hellstromme, but thats his lookout, not ours."

"You work for Hellstromme now, Zarkov. You would do well to remember that. These
toys of yours..." she swept her hand across the warehouse, pausing meaningfully on
the two-story Entropy Projector, "...are expensive, and as long as Dari... Dr.
Hellstromme is paying your bills, you would be wise to respect his authority."

"If hes so free with his money, why hasnt he funded any of the new
projects? Instead, we have to rebuild the Bus, and SUZY " Zarkovs voice
trailed off for a moment as he choked down his rage. How dare they put SUZY through
this again? "Maybe that project in your private lab might be of some help in
taking the site," he suggested.

Jacynths gaze remained level with Zarkovs own. "My personal
investigations are dedicated to... ethereal research, which will be of little use to us
here. Times short, Zarkov. Youll have to take Gulgoleth with what we
have."

Zarkov sighed. "Ill need 30 men..."

"Twenty."

"What?!? Twenty men, with nothing but out-of-date equipment and this
experimental junk of yours? I dont care how important Gulgoleth is, thats not
enough!"

"It will have to do." The demon within Ambrose loosed the foreboding look
upon Jacynths face and calmed her voice into a low, feminine tone. "Erik
Dr. Hellstromme is counting on you. If the Iron Dragon were to get a rail line through the
site..."

Zarkov snapped back. "Kang wants that site?" Jacynth smiled inwardly as she
noticed Zarkovs hackles rise. "The Rats will not have that site, madam. You
have my word on that. Forty-eight hours, and well be ready to hold Gulgoleth come
Hell or high water."

"Then Ill leave you to your plans." The demon-puppet placed a
comforting hand on Zarkovs shoulder, and said, "Youre making the right
choice, Erik. Dr. Hellstromme will look favorably on your efforts."

Zarkov softened at the touch, and with a final nod, returned to his work; Hellstromme
had designed the Ambrose body well.

Success! the manitou crowed internally. Though it had little concern for Hellstromme
and his agenda, a certain amount of interest had to be feigned. Otherwise, its plans would
be discovered far, far too soon

Friday - 7:51 p.m.

"A nice piece of work, that," Coleman admitted, somewhat admiringly.
"Though I figured youd have to kill those two hired guns of Grimmes to
get the Bible."

The contempt was clear on Mad Wolf Stridings face. "Much as someone should
have done with you?" the Sioux shaman growled.

J.P. chose not to take offense at Mad Wolfs comment. These days he found it best
if he didnt get riled at folks who offended him. Otherwise, the results tended to
be... bloody. Katie had managed to endear herself to the Sioux by returning Josephs
body, and since Colemans return, Dex had warned him to be... "diplomatic".

"Maybe so," Coleman replied casually. "Im just here observing for
the Rangers. But I cant help but wonder You folks must have had some help. Or
maybe it was just the sun in my eyes playing tricks ?"

"You whites know so little of the world around you," Mad Wolf Striding
sneered. "So unlike us. Even after the Sioux die, our spirits battle on, without the
need for demons and bargains. Our power is pure "

"...and youre as strong as ten men?" Coleman finished
sardonically. "Which of your buddies drew the short straw in the Hereafter?"

"Little Running Bear, dead man. His spirit aided us against Elijahs men, and
now we have the Bible."

Coleman sneered. "Score one for the good guys." So much for diplomacy, he
added.

If Mad Wolf took offense at the comment, he didnt honor it with a response... or
he considered Coleman unworthy of one.

"So what are your plans now?" Coleman continued, after a moment of silence.

"We head for Gulgoleth. Sweetrock is already with us. Are you?" Mad
Wolfs expression clearly belied his preference on the matter.

Apparently hes not too good at this diplomacy stuff either, Coleman
noted. "Ill get back to you. Patterson thinks the rail barons plan to take it,
but that might not be enough to get him involved. Anything you want me to tell him?"

"Elijah has no interest in your iron horses. Gulgoleth is a seat of power. Even
without the Bible, the Mad One has many resources. Perhaps enough to take the site.
Perhaps not."

"Sure, whatever," mumbled Coleman, turning to leave. He was done with this;
if Dexter and Patterson thought it was important, theyd join. If not, then the
others could face Elijah alone. It made no difference to him anymore.

Saturday, August 10, 1878 - 1:03 a.m.
Three days to Doomsday

Elijah turned as Alonso entered the mesas central chamber, followed closely by
Cain and Abel. The latter two were disheveled, and stumbled forward, their condition all
too familiar to the Prophet. "Tell me you have not failed again."

Judiciously, Cain stepped back, letting Abel take the lead. The larger Angel tugged
vaguely at one ear and had the good sense to look sheepish. "We were attacked by the
Sioux. They took the Bible." He winced in anticipation of Elijahs angry reply,
and most likely a hail of blows or worse.

But instead, Elijah laughed. "Beautiful! The Lord does indeed work in mysterious
ways, His wonders to behold!"

Abel looked to Cain, confused, and the smaller man shrugged. "Begging your pardon,
Brother Elijah, but wasnt the Bible rather... important to your plans?"
Certainly, the Prophet had led Abels employer Grimme to believe that the volume was
important, and the Reverend probably had his own plans for it as well.

"It was a work of vast evil," Elijah explained to the shocked soldiers,
"written by craftsmen of the Devil! A necessary tool, to be sure, but one I loathed
to use. If it has been taken from us, then it is the Lords Will as I believed
all along."

Abel looked no less puzzled, but this was the case with many topics, even long after
they were ably explained. It was up to Cain to pursue the issue. "So the ritual can
proceed without it?"

"You are correct as always, Brother Enrique. Cain! Abel! You may retire to the
temporary quarters below to prepare. I will need both of you at my side when inspiration
comes."

As the two Lost Angels withdrew, Elijah turned to Alonso. "Your time has come,
Enrique." Elijah paused for a moment, and Alonsos stomach clenched.
"Complete the errands we discussed earlier. Prepare Sister Megan and the other
runners. When you return, we shall be ready. The Last Kingdom is upon us."

With that, Elijah returned to his work, spread out across the table before him, and
Enrique withdrew quietly from the room. Given the burden Elijah had saddled him with,
Alonso had only a few minutes to prepare a message for Father Terrance.

Saturday - 11:14 p.m.

"So where the hell is Blackjack, anyway?" Rhett snarled.

"Hes got business elsewhere, Rhett." Garret looked up lazily from
checking his gun. "Like it said in the telegram."

"I dont like it. Whyd Jackie pick me to deal with those Injuns?"

"Jackies got a weird sense of humor," Rose pointed out.
"Pickin you as the diplomat and all. Probably just figured youd been
around town a little longer then me or Andy And its not like theyre
going to listen to Skunky "

Caufield didnt seem particularly satisfied by that explanation, but rather than
pursue the matter, he began pacing back and forth about the cavern, between the slumbering
bodies of ragtag outlaws. Most of the men were trying to get some shuteye before the
assault on Gulgoleth, and while theyd learned to ignore Skunkys staccato
snoring and obscene stench, Caufield wasnt sure theyd appreciate it if an
argument woke them up.

Garret held up part of his rifle, checking for traces of dust. Satisfied, he slipped it
back into place. "Dont you fret about her now, Rhett. Shell stay out of
it if she knows whats good for her. Lets go over the plan one more time."

Caufield scowled. "Simple enough. We head north for Gulgoleth, runnin
alongside the Sioux and the Rangers. Two parties: me with Skunky, Darren, and half the
men: you two and Wendigo leadin the rest. We shoot anythin weird that
aint an Injun or Confederacy. And if we see Elijah, we take him down first
thing."

"Good enough," Garret nodded. "And if we get separated?"

"I get my men back to the hideout, or into Gomorra if any of them need
healin. I get word to that Wise Cloud fella bout the situation if I get back
first: otherwise, youll take care of it."

"Sounds like a plan. Suggest you get some sleep, Rhett. Gonna be a long couple of
days." With that, Andrew leaned back against the rock wall, closed his eyes, and was
out like a light.

"Still dont like it " Caufield grumbled. But like Garret said, it
might be a long time before he could get any rest again. He settled down, but still, sleep
was a long time coming.

Sunday, August 11, 1878 - 4:31 a.m.
Two days to Doomsday

Quon Lins long braided hair flapped in the wind as he perched neatly within the
cave mouth. He had discovered this small niche on the eastern edge of Gulgoleths
central mesa during his first reconnaissance. From here, he could see most of the eastern
exits out of the Gulgoleth valley. If anyone tried to slip out this way, hed see
them. The other exits were covered by the various outfits the Sioux had recruited - all
except the north, which was too far away for convenient access to anything.

The Maze Rat redirected his attention as he heard a brief fluttering noise. Squinting
through the moons glare, he thought he saw a figure flying through the air above
him, recently emerged from an entrance higher up on the mesa cliff side. The figure
circled about and headed north.

Quon Lin wasnt surprised to see a man fly: it was no less believable then
anything else hed seen as a member of the Spiritual Society. But the unexpected
presence of aerial warriors made his task much more difficult - and threatened the
Siouxs ground-based assault of the area. Was it worth leaving his post to warn them?

Lin weighed the options for a moment, then prepared to leave, only pausing when he
heard a pebble dribble down the cliff side above. Instinctively, he brought the sickle in
his right hand up and around, preparing to meet the new threat head on.

A piercing wail preceded a stream of thick green ichor, sprayed down onto the cave
mouth, inches away from Quon Lins hunched form. Glancing up, the martial artist
caught sight of an abomination, clinging to the mesa wall - a large scorpion-like creature
with an orange, scale-like hide.

Wall Crawler! Lin cursed. But what is it doing so far from the channels?

Pivoting across the ledge on the ball of one foot, Quon Lin narrowly avoided the
creatures long tail as it slammed down beside him. The Wall Crawler withdrew its
tail for another strike, but Lin lashed out again, severing the tip.

The creature was wounded, but not mortally, and was mere moments from pouncing onto the
ledge and ripping Lin apart. Left with no other alternative, he released his grip on the
rock face and dropped into the darkness.

Time seemed to slow as Quon Lin summoned his chi. The mesa wall drifted idly past him,
allowing him more then enough time to twist into the proper posture. Energy welled in his
legs, the world fell away, and he landed on the ground as lightly as a snowflake.

Time sped back into sync and lightning crashed above, revealing the Wall Crawler
descending towards him. Lin would have to find a less occupied vantage point next time.
Turning, he ran south for the Spiritual Societys headquarters.

Sunday - 6:26 a.m.

"Forward, men!" Sykes shouted.

The Lieutenant Colonel glanced at his soldiers with pride as they moved forward towards
the mesa, knowing that Patterson and his Confederate forces lurked somewhere up ahead, and
mentally revised his battle plan. Williams and his elite squad would provide cover fire
and eliminate any special nuisances, distracting Elijahs forces
long enough for the remainder of the Union troops to close on the central mesa.

Ultimately, though, Sykes attention was focused on Patterson. The Union would
never fall to untrained civilians on the field of battle. The real threat would be
Confederate, and Sykes was well prepared to deal with them. One way or another, by sunset
tomorrow, the mesa would be theirs.

It was only when he heard the first screams up ahead, and the unearthly wailing, that
Frederick Sykes began to wonder if he was wrong.

Fifty yards to the left, Ripley Scone glanced at his leader. "I dare say, that
does sound rather painful."

Cort sighed. "Sykes is a big boy. He had to learn sometime what hes facing
in Gomorra. Weve got our own assignment, and if we fail there may be nothing
left for Sykes to fight for."

The Agency commander gestured the rest of his team forward, towards the mesa.

Sunday - 1:03 p.m.

"I dont like it, William." Wise Cloud glanced nervously over the
gathering tribes. There were many of them, but it was his experience that his people
operated best as an army of individuals, not a sea of chaotic regimen. "We are not
meant to fight like this."

Iron Horse shrugged. "Eagle Rock and Walks-in-Footprints are in rare agreement.
Gulgoleth poses too great a danger. I understand your concerns about the Tree, but no one
agrees that the Dim Eyes attack on it has weakened us."

Disappointed, Wise Cloud asked, "Not even you?"

Billy Iron Horse considered the elder shaman for a moment, then shrugged. "Not
even I. The Dims are a wound, true, one which continues to bleed. But we must trust to
Raven Smiles and the others to protect the Tree. And I also believe that Elijahs
control of this mesa is a threat just as dangerous, and far more pressing."

"I am not arguing against the need for this assault, but without the Tree, we can
protect nothing! Cant you feel our spirits weakening? Our ancestors voices
growing faint?"

For a moment, Billy Iron Horse considered the shamans words, then visibly shook
off his doubts. "Eagle Rock leads us, and I trust his judgement. Besides, Little
Running Bear now watches over me, as you well know. Bear lives in the Spirit World now,
regardless of his presence here, and he would warn us of any pending danger from the roots
of the Tree. He has power now, and vision. He healed me, when you and Singing Feather
could do nothing."

"Do not become overconfident, William. Bears spirit protects us all, but
without the Tree, even he can do little. And the Tree is much weakened since he brought
you back "

"Enough!" exclaimed Iron Horse. "Eagle Rock leads us, and
Walks-in-Footprints has committed our people to help Sweetrock remove Elijah from
Gulgoleth. That is our path, my friend, and it is enough."

Wise Cloud said no more, for in truth Eagle Rock had spoken, and few would move against
him.

Still, he was concerned. Very concerned

Monday, August 12, 1878 - 8:12 a.m.
One day to Doomsday

Buster Madison strolled along the boardwalk, absently whistling to himself. It had been
a rough night at the Casino Morongo; seemed all the gamblers on their way to Soddum had
stopped in Gomorra along the way. More than one fight had broken out, and Buster felt
obliged to report to the Sheriff on the collateral damage. A little "civic
service" couldnt hurt a talented man of the felt, and he might be able to
eliminate some competition to boot.

Arriving at the sheriffs office, Buster frowned. The deputies usual
early-morning chatter over coffee was absent. This wasnt the hustlers first
visit to the sheriffs office - voluntarily or otherwise - and he could set his watch
by Radcliffe and Montreal ragging each other over a morning cup of java.

Cautiously, Buster tried the door. It was unlocked, which wasnt unusual; Hunter
had kept up Colemans "open-door policy", figuring it was good for public
relations. There wasnt much of anything inside worth stealing, except for
Colemans badge mounted on the wall. And even the Whateleys werent fool enough
to swipe that.

Madison didnt carry a gun, figuring there were enough gunslingers in town that
one more wouldnt make a difference, so he tread lightly as he entered the office and
glanced around.

Deserted, he noted. The cells were empty as well. No surprise there. The worst of the
rabble are probably all whooping it up out at Soddum. Godforsaken place. I wouldnt
be caught dead there.

A note was pinned to one wall, where Hunter and his men usually left messages for each
other. Stepping closer, Buster could make out Jessie Freemonts cribbed handwriting:

The Snitch came by earlier and warned me that something big is going down at Gulgoleth.
Everyone else is still out hunting Templeton. But someone has to look into this. I am
already on my way. If any of you get this message, follow as soon as you can.

P.S. Radcliffes in charge while Im gone. Jesse - make sure theres a
town left to come back to.

Jessie - 6:45

Buster frowned. That doesnt sound good He was a city man, born and bred.
But he had heard enough whispers about the Gulgoleth wilderness to know it wasnt a
place he would visit any time soon. Elijahs folks were out there in great numbers.

And his palms still itched from his last encounter with the Lost Angels...

Leaving the note undisturbed, Buster turned quietly around and left the way he came.

* * * * *

Scowling, Jessie Freemont assessed the situation. The Law Dogs were undermanned and
outgunned, by the look of things. Nate, Olson, and Montreal were back in town, Powell and
Flatbush were God knows where, and he couldnt trust newbies like Beenz and Cooper
with something this important. Radcliffe was a good man, for a performer, but he was going
to have to man the shop.

For a moment Jessie considered simply withdrawing and letting the various outfits shoot
it out. But Nate Hunter had given him a chance and with it his trust. Jessie wasnt
about to let the sheriff down, no matter how strange he was acting recently.

"The men are ready, Jessie," Wendy said, returning with a crowd of newly
appointed deputies. "From what I can tell, the Union troops skirmished with something
weird yesterday, and spent last night recouping. They think the Confederacy was
responsible. But the loners out on the plains say Pattersons men are miles away, and
have problems of their own." She paused for a moment, apparently thinking the same
thing as Freemont. "This is only marginally within our jurisdiction, Jessie. No one
will think less of you if we leave the armies and the rest to duke it out without
us."

"To hell with that, Wendy," Freemont snarled. "Ive had a belly
full of the Confederacy and the Union, marching in here like theyre the law o
this land. Last I checked, Gomorra answers to itself and to California, and everyone else
can go to hell. Were the Law around here, and I mean to make sure they understand
that."

"Im with you - you know that," Wendy reassured him. "So long as
you know what were getting into. The Whateleys, Elijahs men "

Jessie patted her shoulder sympathetically. "Thats part of it, too. Maybe
Sheriff Hunter cant prove it, but Nicodemus Whateley killed your father. I know it
in my gut, and its a score the law can settle here, today."

"Not in cold blood, Jesse. You know that dad wouldnt have wanted it that
way."

"Only if thats what it takes, Wendy. Only if thats what it
takes."

Monday - 9:46 a.m.

"Where is it?!?" the demon within Jacynth screamed. Lab technicians scrambled
for cover and a few even considered fleeing the building, to take their chances with the
chaos outside to avoid her wrath. "Jacynth" shoved her way through desks covered
with blueprints, raging through piles of partially assembled devices, but there was no
trace of the weapon she was looking for. Reaching out, she casually grabbed one man by the
neck and hauled him up close to her face. "Where is it?" she screamed at him.

"Ummm no. I dont think so. I thought I saw Miss Franklin with it
earlier "

"That !" Jacynth screamed, throwing the hapless delivery boy away from
her with a single fluid motion. Schacci slammed into a bank of equipment, then scurried
away before she could get to him again.

Jacynth paced back and forth irritably, considering the situation. Hellstromme be
damned! Catering to his whims to preserve her "cover" could only go on for so
long before she snapped. While Zarkov and the better-armed members of the Collegium were
at Gulgoleth, the Whateleys had launched an unexpected assault on Gomorra. She would need
the pump gun to defend herself it they reached the Observatory. Though its booster cells
were still experimental, it was still the most powerful weapon left at the Collegium base.

With a near-inhuman growl, Jacynth returned to her private lab. It looked as if she
would have to activate the Captivator sooner then expected. It was best not to anger her
fellow manitous in Gomorra so early, but this was an emergency. If Jacynth didnt
protect herself now, she wouldnt live to feel the manitous wrath later.

* * * * *

Susan Franklin stalked the streets of Gomorra. This section of town was strangely
quiet. Apparently the Whateleys zombie armies had already moved on.

Maybe theyre mobilizing at Elephant Hill, she reasoned.

Regardless, Susan intended to see this matter to an end. The Gomorra Collegium had sat
by far too long while first one side and then another picked them off like flies. First
the Maze Rats, then the Whateleys and their ectoplasmic summoning. Pierre, Whale,
Lawrence, and all the others they would be avenged. She would have preferred this to
happen another way - she was a scientist, not a fighter but sometimes you just had
to take a stand!

Shed already destroyed two packs of Class III ambulatory corpses with the pump
gun, and sent the townsfolk shed rescued to St. Martins where Father Terrance
was accepting survivors of the fighting in town. Though she had little use for religion
herself - shed thoroughly mapped the heavens years ago - she was sure the refugees
would find the place welcome relief. She knew that the Southern preacher would take care
of them, and defend them with his own life if need be.

Elephant Hill was close, so Susan carefully approached to see if the Whateleys had
moved back in. They seemed to be using it as a staging area periodically these days, no
doubt for the abundance of fresh cadavers to add to their ranks.

Susan slowed as she approached Elephant Hill. There was movement upon the
cemeterys central hill. Ducking behind a nearby corner, she peered cautiously toward
the motion and tried to make out the invaders. Strange figures cavorted and danced in the
graveyard, amidst corpses standing upright and motionless. Genetic mutations of some sort,
by the look of them, clad in mockingly cheerful garments. Susan recognized a few of them
from the circus outside of town. Members of the "Troupe," no doubt. Franklin
wasnt aware the carnival freaks were working with the Whateleys, but somehow it
didnt surprise her.

Suddenly all the twisted mutations came to an abrupt halt as two women emerged from one
of the mausoleums. One was a gunslinger by the look of her, though Susan didnt
recognize her. Maybe shed seen the woman about town once or twice in the company of
the Blackjacks

The other was Chinese, and wore wholly inappropriate white undergarments. Franklin held
a pair of magnifying spectacles to her eyes, and could just discern a bright flush to the
womans cheeks. If she was an ambulatory corpse, she was at least Class II, and maybe
even Class I. She seemed sluggish, almost dazed, as if newly awakened - or newly
reanimated.

The women spoke back and forth for a moment. Susan had never mastered the art of
reading lips, and was unable to make out their words. In a moment, the Asian woman turned
away and scanned the area, as if trying to find something, or someone.

There was a rustling of wings overhead, and Franklin glanced up to witness the first
Class I mutation she had ever seen in Gomorra. A human male, with a broad pair of wings.
Such experimentation was banned by the Collegium, of course (though she had her own dark
suspicions about exactly what Klippstein was up to in his laboratory). But as far as she
was concerned, only the Whateleys occult sciences were capable of creating such a
creature.

What was it doing here? Occult propaganda? Misdirection? A common citizen might mistake
the being for an angel of God and panic, but Susan had never been superstitious. Maybe
this was one of Elijahs reputed "lost angels."

The winged man landed next to the gunfighter and they shared a few words. Franklin
considered the situation carefully. The Whateleys, she would have gladly gone up against
on her own. But if they were allied with the Blackjacks, the Lost Angels, and the
mysterious Troupe, that was far more than she - or perhaps even the whole of the Collegium
- were ready to tackle.

Zarkov must be informed! This is far more important than petty vengeance

At a sudden noise behind her, Susan spun to face a group of Class III
alchemically-animated corpses. She triggered the pump gun, and a burst of electrostatic
energy blew the head of the lead figure clean off. It toppled to the ground, but the
others behind it surged forward

Monday - 10:24 a.m.

Whatcha doin, Charlie... This is suicide, the former bartender thought to
himself as he approached the tent. He had vowed never to cross paths with the Troupe
again, but here he was, sneaking through the Devils Playground under cover of rain.
Coming here during broad daylight would have been suicidal but then again, it was
scarcely less obvious - and potentially far more deadly - at night.

Charlie Landers had scores to settle. But first, he had to take back what was his.
Unfortunately, he didnt have a clue how to go about it.

Thats typical. This is just where you were ten years ago - younger, but just as
stupid.

Scratchs deal was tempting then, but Charlie had since had a decade to look back
and regret, and now he was ready to close the bargain - on his own terms. He wasnt a
total idiot: hed waited until most of the Troupe crawled, slid, and slithered
through the streets of Gomorra, heading towards Elephant Hill to meet the Whateleys. They
never went anywhere without Esmerelda, and without her to psychically watch over the
carnival, the former bartender had at least a passable chance of sneaking in unnoticed.

Cassandra had provided a plan of the Troupes current configuration. The
place had changed more then once since Charlie had been here, which didnt surprise
him. The one thing you could always count on was that the Troupe was always changing.

According to Cassandras map, Esmereldas tent was on the other flank of the
sideshow. With luck, he would be in and out long before she returned from whatever battle
she and the Whateleys were fighting. As for Scratch who knew where he was? Landers
had seen him about town more then once since the Troupe had returned, and he knew that the
man - was he really a man? - took many disguises - or were they forms?. He couldnt
count on Scratch to be gone any more than he could count on getting out of this situation
alive.

Those are the risks when you deal with the Devil

Charlie ventured straight through the sideshow tent, slipping past the flap and into
the dark, humid interior. The first thing that hit him was the stench; Charlie gagged at
the reek of vomit, unwashed human flesh, sulfur, formaldehyde, and other substances he had
never been able to pin down. It seemed different than he remembered, and yet somehow part
of it remained the same, even after all these years. The Troupe usually tidied up for
public shows, but there werent any scheduled for some time, especially with the
weirdness of late.

Then the sights hit him: a few feebly flickering oil lanterns illuminated the
Troupes prize exhibits at least, the ones currently useless to them on the
field of battle. Slugs of flesh floated in glass jars of preservatives, stuffed creatures
stood poised in eternal tableaus of torment But Charlie saw through the illusion;
the slugs were not preserved, merely drugged, and the exhibits werent entirely dead,
and not quite stuffed. A casual viewer might have dismissed the creatures flickering
eyes as a trick of the light, or the work of an expert craftsman, but Charlies
sanity was not so well protected.

Shuddering, he kept his eyes to the twisted path leading through the Sideshow and out
the other side. He stumbled forward, unaware of the two figures who followed quietly
behind him. Never one to ignore the lessons of the past, Scratch had not committed all his
minions to the fray

Monday, August 12th, 1878 - 10:59 a.m.
One day to Doomsday

"Mr. Rose, its that time. Inform the men that we move now."

William Rose gestured the other Blackjacks in their group forward, then whistled over
to Caufield and his group on their flank. Wendigo Garrison still looked doubtful about the
whole thing, but he wasnt about to argue with Andrew Garret. Not unless he wanted to
make an abrupt and permanent visit to Boot Hill.

Leaving his horse with the others, Andrew lead his group of men through the light
drizzle. He knew that many of the men beside him were unsure about allying with the Sioux
and assaulting Gulgoleth, but he also knew how many times Black Jack had saved his life,
how much he owed the outlaw. If Jackie wanted Gulgoleth out of Elijahs hands, then
that was exactly what he was going to get.

Besides, there was no better place to be for a robber than ground zero of a fight.
Someone was going to fall, and Andrew would be there to collect their belongings

Garrets reverie was interrupted by screams and a burst of gunfire, somewhere up
ahead. He instinctively ducked for cover, then glanced over the rocks to check on everyone
else. The rest of the Blackjacks had gone to ground as well, but two of them were
occupied. Garrison and Rose were near the front, firing at

What the hell is that thing? Garret wondered. Hed heard the stories, of course,
of strange things that happened in Gomorra: fu masters who could catch bullets, scientists
who flew through the air with rockets strapped to their backs, and a towering demon that
had strode the land one dark and twisted night. But he was new to the area, and
didnt lay much stock in wives tales of demons and black magic. He wasnt
at all prepared for what was advancing on the Blackjacks position now.

A crack of lightning illuminated the twisted, skeletally gaunt figure in the lead,
dressed in brown robes. A hood hid its face, which was just fine as far as Andrew was
concerned: he didnt care to see whatever passed for flesh and bone beneath. The
figure held a weird long-barreled gun in both hands, and was spraying some kind of energy
out of it like water from a hose. It advanced steadily, seeming unconcerned about the hail
of bullets that the outlaws were pumping into it.

Behind the creature, acting as point man, were a horde of men dressed in red robes,
wielding rifles and other "mundane" weapons. They look more like a cult than an
army, Garret thought to himself as he brought his gun to bear.

Suddenly, Rose ran from cover and threw himself over the rock protecting Andrew, his
duster swirling. "What the Hell are they, Will?" Andrew shouted at him over the
din of gunfire.

"Elijahs men! The two in front are called Cain and Abel!"

"And that thing in the lead?"

Rose tried to get a bead on the advancing enemy, but a burst of energy drove him back
down again before he could snap off a shot. "Truth to tell, Andy, I dont
know!" he snarled, brushing dust out of his eyes. "Ive heard rumors
You ever hear about somethin called a Hangin Judge?"

"Hellfire and damnation!" Garrett swore, popping up and pulling off a shot.
The slug slammed into the figures chest, but other than a billow of dust, it seemed
to have no effect. Ducking back behind cover, he tried to fight down his panic. He had
heard of the Hangin Judges, and he knew that you did not want to be an outlaw when
one came callin.

"My sentiments exactly," Rose snapped back, busy reloading. There was a
sudden motion behind him, and he whipped out a knife as Garret drew a bead over his
shoulder.

A black man was approaching over the rocks from the south. He wore a greasy
black-leather slicker against the inclement weather, and fired a shotgun over the rocks
every few moments, pumping and rechambering wildly. Diving down beside the Jacks, a
cock-eyed grin on his face, he practically blurted, "Greetings, gents! Sorry to drop
in on you, but it looked like you needed my help!"

Funny man. Just what Garret needed. "Who the Hell are you?"

"Names Hastings. Texas Ranger. Looks like you folks have found the
party."

"Scouts reported that Elijahs men were headed this way. Can you hold
them?"

Rose paused for a second, listening for a break in the opposing gunfire. He popped up
and fired two shots, surveyed the situation for a second, then dropped back behind cover.
"Weve lost six men already, Andy! Looks like Skunky took a hit. Maybe Darren as
well. Elijahs menll be on us in a minute. Maybe two."

"That answer your question, Mr. Hastings?" Garret sniped.

"Well enough. Id suggest you drop back. Maybe you and your survivors link up
with us to the south, we can stop them before they get to Gomorra.

Rose didnt look too happy about any of this, but Andrew would have been surprised
if he had: the Confederacy had several warrants out in Williams name. But those
warrants were issued a long ways away and there were more immediate concerns right now.

"Order them to fall back, Will," Garret instructed. "Tell them to follow
Hastings here. Well make our stand " he glanced over at the Ranger.

"A quarter mile south and a little to the east."

Rose paused, but Garret didnt have time to coddle him. "Do it!" he
shouted, then returned to Hastings and the plan.

Monday - 11:02 a.m.

Gus Gallagher circled his autogyro high above the battlefield. A low bank of fog had
rolled in off the Maze, providing him some additional cover to the east, but he
didnt care to use it. This was the kind of thing he lived for. Besides, the rain
would wash the fog away soon enough; better that Gus not rely on it to get him through.

Cort had sent him up here to give the Agency a birds eye view of the fighting,
and to verify reports that the opposition had some kind of aerial support as well. So far,
Gus hadnt spotted any opposing autogyros, though he did find Pattersons
Confederate troops, advancing west of Gulgoleth. Hed also thought hed spotted
the Rangers southeast of the mesa. No doubt they were operating separately of the Southern
armed forces. They probably werent even informed about each others positions.
Bad news, Gus worried.

The rain restricted both forces artillery. A good thing for everyone, Gus
figured. Itll be hard enough to fight the Angels without a hail of explosives all
around.

Something caught Gallaghers eye off to the east, a movement through a gap in the
fog. He shoved the controls down and his autogyro screamed into a power dive. There! Three
figures, by the look of them, heading south for Gomorra. Two men and a woman, and one of
the former a walkin dead. The other man was curiously dressed: wearing only a
loincloth with a pouch at his side, his skin covered head to toe in tattoos.

Gus didnt recognize any of them, but they were marching out of enemy territory,
so he drew his gun and loosed a couple of rounds at them. They ducked for cover and the
tattooed man fired back, but they only seemed to be worried about defending themselves.
Which meant

There was an enormous crash and the sound of rent metal as something slammed into the
autogyros flank. Gus turned as best he could in his restraint harness to see a
skinny leather-clad man, clinging to the side of his vehicle, a pair of broad wings
protruding from his back. Guess the rumors are true, Gus noted as the winged soldier drove
a flaming sword into the engine of the craft.

"Alastor sends you to Hell!" the man yelled, releasing himself. He plummeted
down for twenty feet, then spread his wings and, after a brief dip, glided back toward the
injured vehicle. Behind him, a horde of other winged figures approached.

Gus tried to feed more fuel to the engines, but it was no good. The autogyros
rotors sputtered out, and it started to fall. Gus tried to dead-stick the craft to the
ground, scanning the area for a place that wasnt rocky or unstable. He managed to
coast the craft most of the way down, but a rock outcropping sent the autogyro off its
landing gear and spinning wildly across the ground. The force of the impact threw
Gallagher clear of the gyro just as it burst into a fireball and sent dust and rocks up
all around him.

Rolling over, Gus looked up to see the host of angels? passing overhead.

How can we hold the line against that? For a moment, his hopes dropped.

"What do we have here?" a woman cooed behind him. Gus turned, wincing in pain
as his broken rib made its presence known, to see a pale, attractive woman approaching him
- the one hed glimpsed from overhead. Behind her, the two men, covering her
approach. The tattooed man wielded an odd pistol: weird science, by the look of it.

Despite his circumstances, a wave of desire for the woman washed over the downed pilot.
Some kind of witch, apparently. He checked his weapons; the gun had been thrown well clear
in the crash, and the tattooed man would kill him before he could use his knife.

The woman considered for a moment, then nodded. "Ill leave him to your
tender mercies, Moloch. We must be about our business. Otherwise I would enjoy
myself at some length, I think."

Gus didnt know whether to be flattered or revolted at the womans morbid
compliment, and it didnt look like hed have time to think on it.
"Moloch" staggered forward, drool and ichor welling in his mouth. Gus closed his
eyes, waiting for the end, only to hear a sudden crash, and the sound of metal impacting
flesh.

"I think not!" a welcome voice cried out. Gallagher opened his eyes to see
the robust man known only as the Crucible standing over Lilliths Harrowed underling.
Before the other two could react, he pulled back and threw his enormous hammer, straight
and true, into the tattooed mans hand. The weird science pistol exploded and the
tattooed man fell backward, grabbing his sizzling, broken hand and shrieking in pain.

Moloch was already staggering to his feet as the Crucible grasped Gus by the arm and
easily hoisted him up. The pilots gratitude far exceeded his need to scream at the
awful pain roaring through his chest as the Crucible boomed, "Get back to Williams
and the others. Warn them."

With a shove, the Crucible sent Gallagher on his way, then loosed a tremendous battle
cry and turned to grab Moloch in a vice-like bear hug. The zombie seemed unimpressed,
returning the Agency mans grapple, and the two warriors fell into a death grip, arms
locked about one anothers throats.

Gus ran, ignoring the screaming agony across his torso, and headed south. The Crucible
watched him go, the warmth and tingling of asphyxiation already rushing up his neck. He
knew that he could not destroy the abomination in his grip, but he also knew that his
death would give Gallagher the time he needed to get out of the area - back to the
Agencys field outpost, where he could make a difference.

Monday - 11:48 a.m.

Jordan Caldwell paced nervously. She didnt care for being out in the open, much
less in a cemetery. Anyone could spot her: Rachel, the outlaws still loyal to Jackson, the
Law Dogs, anyone. The Collegium schoolteacher had apparently escaped, though the surviving
zombies had indicated that she might have been mortally wounded in the fight.

Jebediah had commanded that she wait here. Caldwell doubted that the Whateleys would be
happy with the offensive so far, even if a quarter of Gomorra lay in ruins. But she also
knew that the fighting at Gulgoleth would last at least another day. Twenty-four hours.
That was a long time - more than enough to wrest control of a town full of
simpletons

"Greetings, sister," a voice addressed her. Caldwells rifle was already
out, and she brought it up in surprise at the sound, toward three figures whod
entered the graveyard. None of the newcomers - a pale, wispy woman, a much-degenerated
walking corpse, and a pale man painted with tattoos over every inch of his body - were
known to her, though the latter two looked to have been in a brutal fight recently.

"You are the Whateleys representative?" the woman continued.

"Im standing in the middle of a graveyard, surrounded by undead, circus
freaks, and a vampire. You figure it out, sister."

The tattooed man stepped forward. "I am Gnosis, and the vampire is the
one we have come to talk to."

"Im in charge of this little posse," snarled Caldwell. "You talk
to me, or " She paused. The mans tattoos moved, each shape seemingly
snarling and snapping at her. Jordans own origins were steeped in black magic, but
this man was something else altogether.

"Go ahead," she spat, stepping aside and gesturing to Meizhu.
"Shes all yours."

Gnosis nodded once in feigned gratitude, then stepped over to the vampire. Meizhu
looked up, dimly at first. "What do you ask of me?" she finally whispered.

"The battle at Gulgoleth goes well. Elijah commands that you lead the undead in an
assault on the Sweetrock offices." Gnosis paused for a moment, wincing at a sudden
stabbing pain, then continued, "Now is the time to eliminate all that might arise
against him in Gomorra."

"We have already driven the townsfolk before us," Meizhu pointed out
absently.

"Not enough. Sweetrock and the towns others defenders must fall. You must
strike now. Jebediah and the other Whateleys will be here momentarily, as will our own
forces from above after they have scouted the town. Sweetrocks agents have joined
forces with the Sioux and the Collegium returning from the field, and the hosts of the
Lord say they are " Gnosis faltered again for a moment, " are gathered
near the power plant."

"And the Agency?" asked Meizhu, showing some interest in events for the first
time.

A sudden spasm of pain bent Gnosis over. He held his head in his hands as if to contain
some overwhelming pain. "Technology all technology I am sensitive to it.
And the spirits as well. When the two merge someone is playing a dangerous
game."

Gnosis kneeled for a moment in the graveyard dirt, mustering some inner resource, then
looked up. "The Collegium," he whispered. "An experiment."

"Elijah says they are unimportant now, that we are to focus on Sweetrock and the
Sioux."

"Things have changed," hissed Gnosis. "One of the scientists has bound a
powerful spirit with technology. We must find whoever dares to create such an atrocity
without our leave, and destroy them!"

"Then well need reinforcements," Jordan observed. "The Sioux,
Sweetrock, and the Collegium. This wasnt the plan."

"Then reinforcements you shall have!" Jebediah Whateleys voice bellowed
across the tombstones. A small mob of undead and twisted animal-creatures followed him
through the gates of the graveyard, approaching the unholy summit.

Jebediah chuckled, a truly frightening sound. He seemed in unusually good spirits, a
state that Jordan had never experienced during their short acquaintance. "Let us
spread out throughout the town, and finish what you have started if youre
ready, of course."

At Caldwells nod, the army of abominations swung ponderously around and flooded
back into the streets of town, Jordan and the Lost Angels right on their heels. As the
crowd shambled away, no one noticed the door of the graveyards largest mausoleum
swing open, or the many shadowy figures that shambled out.

Monday - 12:44 p.m.

Sandra Harris threw down the pencil and paper with an air of finality. "There!
That should do it!"

Outside, the sounds of battle had grown louder, but she couldnt abandon her post.
Not yet. Max had asked her to keep the lines of communication open as long as possible,
and she was determined to do so. Besides, this was her dispatch office, and the fighters
in the streets would have to pry it from her ice-cold fingers.

Sandra grabbed her satchel, then froze as she caught sight of two figures standing in
the doorway: Melissa Thomas and a weary-looking older man, curiously stout, with a shock
of white hair and a well-oiled raincoat.

But it couldnt be Melissa. She was

"Why, Miss Sandra Harris, as I live and breath so to speak," Thomas
chuckled, stepping into the office.

Sandras heart skipped a beat, and she remained silent. Thomas took another few
steps forward and continued the conversation without her. "Mr. Brash and myself
thought we would pay you a little visit see how business was doing. Youve been
somewhat of a nuisance, you see: helping to end the fighting. Thats something
Im afraid I just cant abide."

"Neither can we," another woman interrupted. Melissa turned leisurely, but
the man at her side remained motionless, staring straight ahead at nothing. In the doorway
were a pale, attractive woman dressed in gray robes and a twisted undead mockery of a man.

"Lillith," Thomas hissed. "Why, its been centuries "

"More on your side of the fence than mine, I think."

Moloch sidled into the room and wavered. He seemed eager enough to attack, but watched
his mistress carefully for the cue to go into action.

"You cant be here by coincidence, Melissa. What do you want in
Gomorra?"

"The same as you, dear Lillith, though perhaps for different reasons."

"Our time draws near, Melissa. The Last Kingdom is at hand. Im sure even you
dont want to be around when the ritual is complete."

Sandra moved quietly, carefully towards the back door. The only one of them even
remotely looking in her direction was Brash, and Harris wasnt sure he was aware of
anything anymore.

"On the contrary, actually," Melissa said. "Theyre going to win
eventually anyway. We both know that. Best that I have a front-row seat for the
storm."

"What do you think, life-stealer? That theyll just give you all these
delicious fruits after theyve gone to all the trouble to fatten them up?"

Melissa smiled. "I have to admit. Theyve done a fine job here. I dont
think Ive seen so many people so utterly consumed with blind acceptance before. They
dont even blink as your kind move in and take over. So ripe So
unsuspecting "

"Youve been helping them." Lilliths shock was clear through her
words.

"Im a little busy at the moment, love, and I really must be going. But let
me offer you this little morsel," Melissa smiled, patting Brash on the shoulder
gently, "as a memento of the old times. A reminder of the fun we had as the world
burned."

Sandra ducked out the door just as the fighting began. Moloch lunging forward, and
Brash brought one fist up, gripping a lit stick of dynamite. A huge explosion followed,
ripping through the Dispatch Office and the neighboring stores, throwing her clear of the
building and into unconsciousness.

Monday - 12:46 p.m.

"Miss Harris?"

Painfully, Sandra opened her eyes, blinking away the rainwater. A man was looming over
her, one that she recognized.

"Gus ?"

"In the flesh, kinda. Cort sends his regards." Gus observed the smoldering
ruins of the buildings not twenty feet away. "I didnt know blowing up the
Dispatch Office was part of the plan."

The office - her office - was nothing but a pile of scorched, shattered wooden rubble
now. "You brought the old girl out of mothballs," Sandra said, looking over to
Gus backup autogyro, its rotors still turning.

"Ran into a bit of trouble myself," Gus said. "Ill tell you about
it on the way. My orders are to get you out to the Colorado - assuming thats still
part of the plan."

"It is. Lets get the hell out of here."

Harris paused at the sound of shifting rubble, turning to the ruins of her office. A
figure slowly pushed itself free of the debris. A woman, dressed in a blue dress of the
Northern style

"Go!" Sandra shouted, shoving Gus towards the gyro. It took only seconds for
Gus to help Sandra onto the autogyro, leaving her to strap herself in as he rounded the
other side and took the pilots seat. And seconds more to rise up into the air.

Harris ears were ringing. A concussion, perhaps. Then she remembered. "We
have to find Zarkov!" she shouted over the rotors. "He has something I
need!"

"What?!?"

"Find Zarkov!"

Shrugging, Gus pulled the autogyro into a banking turn. Below them, Melissa Thomas rose
and brushed splinters from her blue dress. "Another time, darlings!" she called
cheerily to the autogyro, then sauntered away, toward Town Square.

Normally, the odds of spotting any one person in such carnage would be astronomical.
But when Erik Zarkov was about he tended to be obvious. Gus simply looked for the
area of greatest devastation, figuring Zarkov would be right in the middle of things.

Spiraling outwards, it took them only a couple of minutes to spot the biggest battle in
town. Almost a hundred figures skirmished near the power plant: Indians, gunfighters,
scientists, undead, and the winged men Gus had seen earlier.

"There!" Harris shouted, pointing to port. Zarkov rocketed up from the
battleground and picked angels off with a sparkling electrical gun.

Gus pitched the autogyro off to the left, looking for a clear spot amidst the
sky-combat. Zarkov spotted them and blew a hole in the opposing forces, then soared in
their direction. A second later, a mechanical winged demon came flying down towards them.
Erik zigged left and as the creature passed underneath him, he kicked down, hard.
Disoriented, it spiraled down towards the chaos below.

"Follow us!" Sandra yelled through the fighting, who gripped the safety
straps as Gallagher swung back hard to starboard. A large bird, nearly the size of a great
eagle, flew by, soaring up from the plant and heading towards Gulgoleth. For a second it
caught Sandras eye and she could have sworn that it winked at her, but the next
moment it vanished into the rain.

Monday - 12:57 p.m.

Coleman had to admit: Mad Wolf Striding was good.

The warrior, backed by the other Sioux who had committed to the Gulgoleth assault, had
carved an impressive path of destruction through the opposing forces west of the mesa.
Unfortunately, it appeared that the Sioux were running out of steam, leaving J.P., Bobo,
Rex, and the remaining Texas Rangers to pick up the slack.

Without warning, a bolt of fire lanced down out of the sky from one of the hovering
angels and slashed through Mad Wolf. The Sioux warrior hunched over without a sound.
Coleman darted over to his side, firing wildly to keep the angels away. He was only
somewhat successful, dimly aware of a few bullets plugging into his lifeless flesh, but he
ignored them, focusing on Mad Wolfs injuries.

"Bobo! Over here!" J.P. screamed, noticing Mad Wolfs comrade Seeking
Fury as he cut a path to his fellow Sioux.

With a last flourish of cards, Bobo downed a great gray wolf and reached the former
sheriffs side. "You be callin, boss?"

Seeking Fury shoved the huckster aside and knelt over his comrade, running his hands
hesitantly over the mans seeping wounds. Coleman was no expert with Injun magic, but
even he could see something was wrong.

"The spirits abandon us," Fury spoke. "The Tree grows weak."

"Will he live?" J.P. asked. He could care less about the warrior, but their
numbers were already stretched thin. As soon as the strongest of them started falling, it
was all over.

"Yes," Fury replied. "But he will not rise. Not today."

"Damn! Bobo, looks like its time for Dexs plan." Both of the
Rangers knelt over Mad Wolf. "Its time for the Bible, Sioux! We use it now, or
we all go down."

Coleman snarled, "Damned if we do, damned if we dont." Then he shoved
Seeking Fury aside, dug in the fighters pouch, and grabbed the Bible. Even his
long-dead fingers could sense the books cover crawl, suckling his fingertips like a
newborn babe. The skittering of the manitou through his decaying shell were as strong as
he had ever felt them, and he felt a welling hunger unlike anything he had ever
experienced. Then the moment passed, and he tossed the Bible to Bobo. "Do it!"
he shouted.

The Cajun huckster snatched the book out of the air and thumbed quickly through the
crisp pages until he found the right one. Coleman was still too intoxicated by the
appetites of the manitou within him and Seeking Fury was busy with Mad Wolf, or they might
have questioned how LeVeux knew which page contained the proper spell. As it was, however,
the huckster was left unmolested, and began to chant in a language that made
everyones ears ring and the wounded warrior moan in pain.

A moment later, the chanting somehow rang out across the field of battle and everyone
froze. Angels, undead, Indians, and Rangers all paused as Bobo swelled with raw, dark
power. The only motion in the area was a tremendous bird soaring towards them from the
south, a hawk, though larger than Coleman had ever seen.

The hawk dipped toward to the ground and shifted, landing as a vibrant Sioux woman of
incredible youth and beauty. She immediately moved towards Bobo, but Coleman stepped in
the way.

"You have no idea what youre doing!" Strikes a Hawk shouted into his
face.

"So Ive heard," Coleman muttered, holding her back. For the first time,
the woman saw his taut yellow features and smelled his dry, molding flesh, and went for
her knife. But before she could swipe at him, the surrounding area was rocked by an
enormous, silent explosion. A visible shock wave of energy passed through the combatants
and across the plains. Strikes a Hawk, and other Sioux all over the battlefield, clutched
their eyes and ears, and collapsed to the ground.

Turning, Coleman saw the wave of light taper off in the distance as the brunt of its
force washed towards Gulgoleth. Angels and undead fell before it, or retreated from the
ungodly energies. Bobo was kneeling on the ground, the Bible still open before him, its
pages riffling past of their own accord. A second later, the cover slammed shut and a
crack of thunder rolled away from it.

Like a crack of Doom.

J.P. whistled admiringly just before a new wave of gunfire rang out. To the south,
Coleman saw Jessie Freemont leading a mixed force of Law Dogs and townsfolk. Deputies, he
assumed. "Up and at em!" Coleman commanded. "Tend to your wounded as
quick as you can, and get moving. Weve got reinforcements! Lets use
em!"

The fighting had started up again to the north as well, and Coleman could make out
cries of triumph among the Confederate troops assaulting the mesa. Bobos spell had
apparently weakened the enemy forces there as well. He found it hard to smile just yet,
though; he knew that they were still quite a ways from beating Elijah back.

A shuffling sound drew his attention to Bobos drained form again, where Strikes a
Hawk, now recovered and back to hawk form, soared up into the air, the Bible clutched in
her talons.

Good riddance to bad rubbish Coleman thought, returning to the battle.

Monday - 6:18 p.m.

This jog is rather refreshing, Quon Lin thought, knowing that he wouldnt have
been able to keep up with his prey if she had kept her horse at a full gallop. Fortunately
for him, though, it seemed her need for stealth prevented her from running her roan full
out.

Quon was stationed at his new vantage post when he witnessed the Lost Angels
departure from the mesa. His orders were straightforward: intercept anyone who left
Gulgoleth alone or in small numbers: Intercept, interrogate, and kill. Mind that you get
it in the right order! Po Yu had cackled.

Unfortunately, Lin had been unable to close with the female rider before she reached
Gomorra. Perhaps, if fortune was with him, she was headed to her co-conspirators, or would
reveal part of Elijahs plan.

"There he is!" someone shouted.

Hed been so intent on his prey that hed failed to notice the men stumble
onto him. There were ten of them, led by a tall blonde man wearing the badge of sheriff.

Hunter? Quon Lin wondered. The scout had stayed out of town while the Rats retreated to
Shan Fan, tending to Lord Kangs operations and the Spiritual Societys affairs
elsewhere in the Valley. Hed never met Nate Hunter, but the man before him now bore
little resemblance to his description. The Sheriff carried a double-barreled shotgun and
wore a two-gun holster, with bandoleers of ammo looped over his shoulders. His eyes burned
with fury, reflecting the sporadic fires throughout town, and his teeth were bared in a
feral snarl, a challenge.

"Arrest him!" Hunter snarled, and the men behind him surged forward. Quon
dimly noted that several of them had loops of rope, and that none of them looked like they
cared to give him a fair trial.

Too many to fight, and his cover was too important to risk. Reaching into his belt
pouch, Lin tossed a small clay sphere in front of the mob. As it exploded in a burst of
smoke, Quon Lin turned, ran to the next corner, and

stopped dead. Looming before him was a huge man-shaped figure, carved from metal.
Its mock-face leered down at him and two enormous pincers clutched at his arms.

Lin smoothly ducked the attack and dodged between the automatons legs. Behind
him, bullets ricocheted off the robots metal hide.

"Hes with the Collegium!" Hunter shouted to the others. "And
hes got one of those hellish creations with him. Take it down, boys!"

Distracted, the robot charged forward toward the noisier targets, and Quon Lin counted
his blessings. Now to find the woman again

"Why, yes," he blushed, "it is, I suppose. Perhaps if it works here, we
can consider using it on a more permanent basis "

Sandra glanced around the old wooden shack, left behind by the former miners of the
Colorado Lode, and considered the possibilities. It was hardly as comfortable or -
convenient - as the Dispatch Office, but then, beggars couldnt be choosers.

"So why were you fighting amongst yourselves, anyway?" Sandra asked.

"Hmmm?" Zarkov mumbled, soldering a connection.

"That flying robot. It came after you. I figured it was one of yours "

"No, that wasnt one of ours, as far as I know. Its not that we in the
Collegium dont have our little internal squabbles, but some of our enemies are
starting to use technology nearly as advanced as ou ah ha! Thats got it!"

Sandra looked warily at the jury-rigged connection of wires, tubes, and a half dozen
parts shed never seen before. "Perhaps you should start it up and transmit the
first message ." she mumbled.

"Thee of little faith " Zarkov chastised, toggling a few switches and
dials. "Lets see Mr. Ponds of Sweetrock has one of our relay consoles.
Where did I put that microphone ?"

"Microphone?"

"Latin. I believe Oswald coined the phrase before his injury," Zarkov
answered, picking up an odd, cylindrical device and holding it up to his mouth. "Its
function is simple enough. Press down this button, speak into the mesh end, and your voice
should be transmitted directly to Mr. Ponds. Switch the transmission frequency on this
dial here, and you can reach any of the other relay consoles we have out there."

Putting deed to word, Erik flipped the power on. There was a huge burst of sparks, and
he hastily cut the energy flow. "Drat! Well, back to the drawing board "

Sandra sighed. It was going to be a long night

Tuesday, August 13, 1878 - 4:03 a.m.
Doomsday

"I cant thank you enough for your help, Mr. Williams."

"Dont mention it, Jessie," Cort replied, wearily. "And I mean it.
My superiors would be very unhappy if it were to get out that I was helping out."

Freemont shrugged. "Whatever you say."

It had been a long night. Cort, Nelson, and Armstrong had worked alongside Freemont and
his Law Dogs, trying to contain the situation at Gulgoleth. Gus had managed to get Harris
and Zarkov to the Colorado Lode, where they reestablished communication, and Williams had
managed to get in contact with Sister Mary, Benjamin, Delilah, Desmond, and the remaining
Agency operatives in town.

The in-town team had stayed out of the way as much as possible, covertly eliminating
supernatural threats as they could. Armstrong and Nelson had remained out in the field,
and Cort decided that was about as much overt support as the Agency could supply. Sykes
would have to clean up on his own from there. Whether the colonel obtained Gulgoleth for
Union Blue or not was less important than containing information about the attack as far
as Cort was concerned.

It had been surprisingly easy thus far. The townsfolk seemed all too eager to accept
any explanation the Agency cooked up for them. Almost like they wanted to accept it. He
hadnt noticed it until now, but Cort was pretty sure that the Agencys job in
Gomorra had been getting easier ever since the Knicknevin disaster last year. Something
was wrong here, but he couldnt put his finger on it yet.

But just as soon as this little mess is handled, he pledged to himself, Ill get
to the figure it out.

"So whats the word from Gomorra, Mr. Williams?" Jessie asked.

Williams paused for a moment as they slogged through the mud toward base camp. What was
the story again ? "According to all reports, the Collegium were a big help at
first. But then they pulled back toward the power plan, where a gas leak drove most of the
town nuts. Confusion set in, and then that automaton of theirs showed up "

Freemont seemed all too willing to buy it. Cort couldnt blame him, of course; the
Collegium had a fairly bad reputation in town, and most folks were willing to believe the
worst about mad scientists in general. The outfit had a few good men, but as far as
Williams was concerned, anyone willing to work with Darius Hellstromme deserved what they
got. Maybe he could protect Zarkov, who was out of town with Harris through most of the
fighting. Or even recruit him. The Agency could always use a field-scientist

Gomorra loomed up ahead. The rain had died down by now, which was probably why the
fires were burning so bright.

"What the hell?" Freemont exclaimed.

Even from this distance they could hear shouts, yells, and the sound of breaking glass
as a mob swept through the town.

"Disappeared?" Jacynth asked, a little more tersely than Alice was willing to
put up with after the night shed had.

"Look!" Chamberlain yelled back at her. "We were pretty busy out at
Gulgoleth, and then you call us back here to protect the power plant and SUZY escapes
again. Then Sheriff Hunter and his good ol boys start shootin at us
Its a wonder we managed to pull through it at all!"

"Where is the automaton?" Jacynth asked, ignoring Chamberlains
outburst. A human might have wasted time wading into a fight with an underling, but she
didnt see the need right now. Alice - and especially her feelings - were
insignificant to Hellstrommes plans. And Ambrose had already vented her rage at Elmo
earlier: she didnt feel the need to do so again.

"In a containment zone at the far end of the base," Alice said, somewhat
confused by the attachés response. "After we captured her during her
unscheduled tour of the asylum, the techs thought it would be a good idea to
restrain her until Zarkov returned. I must say, your little addition was quite
effective in bringing her down."

"The cyber-demon was rather effective, wasnt it," boasted Jacynth
smugly.

Alice eyed her suspiciously. "And quite the surprise, too, dear. Still not quite
up to snuff, though. I thought I caught a glimpse of rebellion in its eyes. Perhaps a
lobotomy "

"I dont think that will be necessary, Miss Chamberlain. As you were."
Jacynth strolled toward the containment platform where SUZY was being held. Next time, she
thought, my command of the Whateleys servitor demon wont be interrupted before
it can finish the job. Next time that Armitage rebels, it will be at the cost
of my enemies lives.

SUZYs hulking form was strapped to a magnetic plate, which held her in place as
the technicians crawled about, performing a mechanical diagnosis of her systems.

"What I could find of them. Im rather shocked at the lack of professionalism
Ive seen here since we arrived from Deseret."

"I dont think we need to chastise our fellow scientists over this just
now," cooed Jacynth reassuringly. "Can you get the unit back on-line? Will she
be controllable?"

"I believe so. Better, stronger, faster as usual. If were
finished ?" Hardstrom returned to tinkering with SUZYs internal
connections, all of which ran into the mass of gray matter at the center of the
units chest.

If Hardstrom could stabilize the connections and bring the Lycanthropic Cerebral Unit
under complete control, Jacynth could "borrow" his research and apply it to her
cyber-demon. Perhaps she might even send it against Nicodemus Whateley.

Wouldnt that be grand, she mused, resisting a smile. Given what I understood of
their relationship, the creature probably wouldnt even resist.

Enrique Alonso could only assume that the Mad Prophet had finally lived fully up to his
nickname. True, the Host had initially been triumphant. But as far as Enrique could tell,
Elijah had been foolish to waste them in the assault on Gomorra. Divided, those defending
Gulgoleth were driven back by the mysterious wave of magic the attackers had unleashed.

Elijah had few reinforcements left. Mallory, Lillith, Moloch, Gnosis all were
still gone, sent away on various missions. Perdition, Alastor, and Haborym had retreated
within the mesa with the surviving Host, leaving only Winters, Owens, and Regen to guard
the Prophet. They, and Enrique himself.

But the Prophet remained confident. What does he have up his sleeve? Alonso wondered.

As if in answer, Elijah shouted, "Come!", and stalked off into a side
passage, not waiting for Alonso to follow. The Brothers chased after him, and Enrique and
Winters trailed behind. For several minutes they descended ever deeper into the bowels of
the earth, finally emerging within a huge chamber flooded with green luminescence. The
opposite wall was nothing but a great ruin, the remnants of an enormous, tortured angel
chiseled into the stone. From the look of it, the place was once a mausoleum or tomb, or
perhaps a temple of some kind.

"Behold! Sabtabiels Remains!" Elijah screamed triumphantly. "The
portal to the Last Kingdom!"

Madre de dios! Enrique prayed silently. Hed heard the name, but always figured
that the first of the Fallen was merely a legend. Of course - until recently, the Fallen
themselves were assumed to be legends.

This changed things. Alonso had to get word of this out to the Rangers - and to the
Order of St. George. They had to be warned of the danger - of what the Last Kingdom was -
or all their efforts would be for nothing.

"Do you need me for the ritual, Brother Elijah?" he asked, swallowing hard.

The bearded maniac spun on him, his eyes blazing with triumph - and concern.
"What? You would leave, now, at the moment of our greatest triumph?"

"Why why, no, Brother Elijah. But these remains are obviously
important. I must go above, and secure the entrances. If the blasphemers were to gain
entry at this critical moment "

Elijah nodded, a smile creeping across his face. "As always, you speak wisdom,
Brother Enrique. I do let my passion for Gods work overwhelm me at times. Sister
Mercy and the Brothers will be sufficient for the ritual. Go! Tell Alastor and the others
to man the ramparts, and ensure that no one gains entrance before the ritual is
complete."

Enrique nodded and started to withdraw, as Elijah continued. "But return with all
haste, my son. For soon, the entire Gomorra Valley shall bear witness to the most glorious
sight since Creation itself."

Thats what Im afraid of, Alonso thought as he stole away. When he was out
of sight of the Prophet, his quick gait became an open run. Thats what Im
afraid of.

Tuesday - 7:15 a.m.

Walter Ponds fired off a last volley of gunfire, and could only breathe a sigh of
relief when the skeletal figure atop the horse turned to ride away, taking its surviving
walkin dead with it.

He glanced around, taking in the devastation around the Sweetrock offices for the first
time. Corpses, many killed for a second time, were scattered everywhere. Men, wolves,
bats, dogs, horses, and some creatures that Ponds couldnt name (and hoped never to
see again) blanketed the landscape. Near the end, he and his men had fired
indiscriminately, surrounded as they were by not only the Whateley forces, but also an
unexpected street mob.

Exhausted, Ponds leaned against the doorsill, then noticed the Sioux reinforcements
getting ready to leave. He tipped his hat to their leader, the sprightly young woman named
Singing Feather. "My thanks for your assistance, maam. We couldnt have
held them off without you."

"I hope that dividing our forces did not ultimately result in Elijahs
victory," she answered. "We managed to hold the Tree, and near the end we were
able to call upon its power. But it is still weak, and in the future "

Ponds didnt know how to respond. All this talk of a spiritual place and a great
Tree of Life was beyond him. He was just happy that, for the most part, Sweetrock had
survived this latest storm. Of course, if Max didnt find Clell Miller and his
traitorous operation soon, it wouldnt matter.

"I go now to join with the rest of the Sioux," Singing Feather called to him.
"We have to use the power of the spirits while they still answer to us, and it is
time the Whateleys and their new allies are stopped once and for all." Tugging the
reigns of her mount, she swung about and joined the war party leaving Gomorra.

It never ends, does it? Ponds wondered rhetorically.

Kerry and Jane approached, and Walter gestured them into his small office. "Has
anything changed since your last report, Kerry?"

"Nope," the gunfighter replied, lighting up a cigarillo. "We held the
power plant through the night. Davidsons over there now watching the place with a
few of our men. The rest are scattered throughout town, cleaning up. Hunters gone
nuts, near as I can tell, but we managed to hold him off and it looks like hes
taking most of his ire out on the Collegium."

"That leaves Gulgoleth." Ponds summed it up.

"Looks like we control the town through default," Arizona Jane chipped in.
"Unless Hunter somehow gets his act together."

"You ladies know Father Terrance, I believe." Walter waved them to each other
in lieu of introductions. "Hes been tending to the sick and injured over at St.
Martins, but thanks to just a minute." Ponds stepped over to an elaborate
electrical console and flipped a few switches. Getting no response, he went on. "As I
was saying, thanks to the Rangers, and Sandra and Zarkovs efforts out at the
Colorado, hes also managed to keep us up-to-date on events out in the field."

"The situation is still not favorable," Terrance intoned. "Our
infiltrator reports that Elijah prepares for some great ritual. Whether he means to
empower his troops once more, or summon a greater power to strike directly, we do not
know. The report from our man was unexpectedly cut short."

Kerry sighed wearily. "Great. Wheres this ritual takin place?"

"Deep beneath Gulgoleth itself," the priest replied.

"Well, thats it, then," Arizona Jane concluded. "From what
Ive heard, the Prophets drawn all of his surviving forces in there, and the
place is a veritable fortress! Theres no way we can take it!"

Walter chuckled. "Dont worry, little lady. We have a plan "

Tuesday - 8:11 a.m.

Rhett Caufield cursed. Darren was ranting and raving, and slowing them down. They were
separated from Garret and the others during the Angels initial push, and now they
were cut off from the rest of their forces, out in the middle of nowhere, with wounded no
less.

"Howre you doin, Skunky?" he asked the older man, who stumbled
along beside the others.

"Wells as can be expected," the squatter huffed, favoring his left
side. "Hows Titus doin?"

Their destination: the closest place where they could get some food and medical help.
Caufield had heard about Soddum, but didnt know anyone whod actually been
there. Most Gomorra folk wouldnt go near the place for love or money. It supposedly
got a lot of out-of-town visitors, though. Buster once told him that it was a
gamblers paradise; most who visited came back flush with money. Then again, Madison
also talked about how the losers never came back to tell their tales

Skunky wasnt going to make it much farther without aid, and Soddum was it.
Regardless of its reputation, the new boomtown was his best hope to make it out of this
alive.

Soddum was just there. One second you were walking through the wilderness, the
next, the outskirts of town just sprang up around you. As the Blackjacks stumbled into
town limits, Rhett glanced back over his shoulder, checking the path theyd taken.

Coulda sworn that town was still half a mile away, he marveled.

Rhett was also surprised by how peaceful the town was. They were only a couple of miles
from Gulgoleth, but the place seemed to have avoided the devastation surrounding the mesa.
Its quiet, white houses were well built and beautiful, like something you might see out
East, and the rain was already drying all around the area.

Skunky was just as struck by the bizarre sight. "Dont think were
goin to find a doc here, Rhett," he muttered nervously.

"Dont have a choice, Skunky. Lets get movin in and see
what "

"Stop right there!"

A man, wearing a cowboy outfit that was just a bit too clean. His shirt was pressed and
bright, and his chaps nearly gleamed in the morning sun. He had a neatly trimmed goatee,
bright blue eyes, and a smirk that would have given the Devil pause. He was accompanied by
a woman wearing a broad brown duster, her face painted white and surrounded by flowing red
hair. She had a huge revolver in hand and was pointing it directly toward the ragged group
of outlaws.

It took a moment for Rhett to notice their badges - a sheriffs tin on the woman
and a deputys on the man.

"What I believe we have here, Sheriff Syn, are some trespassers," the Deputy
continued.

"Youre not welcome in Soddum," the sheriff said to the Blackjacks.
"Turn back the way you came."

"What the Hell are you on about, Titus?" Rhett asked, gripping the Indian by
the shoulders.

"Careful, Rhett," Skunky said. "He aint been right since that
weird explosion that brought down all the angels."

Im beginning to wonder if hes the only one of us who is right, Rhett
commented to himself.

Hearing a noise, Rhett turned back towards Soddum. Two figures stumbled toward town, a
man and a woman. Both looked like theyd been at the center of a pretty bad
explosion, and the man was damn near unconscious, draped over his companion like so much
cordwood. The two passed the outlaws and were greeted openly by Soddum law enforcement,
who helped them in toward the towns interior.

None of my business, Rhett thought. Gotta get Skunky to a doctor before he bleeds to
death.

Tuesday - 8:58 a.m.

"Move it, you idiot!" Donovan snarled. "Weve only got a couple of
minutes before they come back."

"Shaddup your own self," Sam Horowitz whispered back irritably. As far as he
was concerned, Sweetrock wasnt paying him enough to take Vances garbage.

The Blackjack went back to stringing the demolition charges. He took great care not to
touch the rock that made up the walls of the ruins. Horowitz had brushed against it
earlier, and that was enough. He could have sworn that it felt like well, skin, soft
and fleshy and pulsing. He didnt want to know if hed been imagining things, he
just wanted to be done with this and to get the Hell out of the mesa.

"Gotcha!" Sam snarled, pushing in the last wire. "Move it, Donovan! What
are you doing? Could you be any slower?"

Vance sighed. "Everyones a critic." With a final flourish he finished
off his own pack of explosive charges and pulled back from the cliff face. "Now I
suggest we retire. Our timers are synchronized, and weve got until ten oclock
to reach safety."

"Amen to that!" Horowitz agreed, heading toward the tunnel leading to the
surface. "The faster we get out of here, the better."

Not twenty yards into their ascent, the demolitionists heard footsteps up ahead.
Without a word, they ducked into a side tunnel as six people walked past them and toward
the ruins.

"The time of our ultimate power on Earth approaches. One hour, no more, and we
shall rule the earth in the Lords name!" Elijahs booming tones were easy
to recognize.

"And the Whateleys plan to be there to collect whats theirs," a woman
in a skin-tight black dress and designer holster said.

"Of course, my pretty," Elijah answered. "Your brood will be most
pleased with the Last Kingdom, Im sure."

Their conversation faded into the distance as the crowd moved out of earshot, into the
central chamber at the center of the mesa. Horowitz glanced silently at Donovan, whose
expression was enough. Without another word, they broke into a run up the tunnel and away
from the lair.

Tuesday - 9:27 a.m.

"This is a mistake, Jebediah," Nicodemus pointed out for the fourth time.

"Silence! Ive tolerated your insubordination for the last time, nephew.
Ill see the heads of those benighted redskins on poles, every damned one of them, if
we have to march into Hell itself. Besides, once we hold the power plant, we hold the
town."

Nicodemus shrugged, and went back to flipping through his deck of cards. Now
wasnt the time to challenge Jebediahs power. Not yet

Nic had never been convinced that Elijah was anything more than insane. Not that he was
worried about working with the mentally ill. Some of his best friends were crazy. Speaking
of which

Armitage? Where are you? Nicodemus wasnt sure whether to be relieved or nervous
that the voice in his head (the newest one, anyway) had died away. Was the manitou on some
special mission, or had the chaos that engulfed Gomorra finally destroyed it? Nicodemus
would have welcomed the latter, but suspected the former.

"Strike! Now!" Jebediah screamed suddenly. His followers, and the Lost Angels
remaining in town, were struck dumb for a second, but then slowly lurched into motion.

In the morning light, something soared overhead - a twisted, bloated figure of pale
green. It struck down, straight as an arrow, at Jordan Caldwell. Screaming, she unleashed
a volley of bullets into it, but it was undeterred, and slammed into her, driving her into
the ground. Nicodemus, stunned, watched as the attacking ghost yanked Caldwells
spirit from her body and tore her ethereal form apart.

"Oh, thats not good." Nicodemus muttered. Squinting, he was just able
make out the true form of the spirit that had attacked Caldwell. "Cousin
Malrog?"

The spirit-being looked up. Yes, it was definitely Malrog Whateley. Through the blank
stare, he could almost see a glimmer of recognition. Instinctively, Nicodemus summoned a
hex to mind as the spirit threw itself forward at him

and was blasted into a thousand slithering pieces of mist as a bolt of energy
slammed into it from ahead. Glancing to his left, Nicodemus saw the tattooed freak,
Gnosis, the barrel of his gizmo-gun smoking and leaking a pale yellow liquid onto the
ground. The Whateley scion tossed off a mocking salute of thanks, then paused as a white
nebulous mass formed behind the Lost Angel.

Seeing the look on Nicodemus face, Gnosis spun to find another spirit glaring
down at him, its eyes sharing the same dull Whateley stare. The new spirit swept out at
Gnosis with a gaseous tentacle, sending him flying across the street, then swept up a
half-dozen Angels and sucked them slowly but inevitably into its mass.

Et tu, Enoch? Nicodemus pondered. He could now see other Whateley spirits rising about
them. Dear departed Ezekiel staggered through the ranks of the Angels, striking them down
one by one. Moses stalked their ranks as well, crushing them and leaving behind their
broken remains.

Then, behind the spirits, Nic caught sight of a flesh-and-blood Indian, his eyes
burning with infernal fire. Then another, and another, until there were more than he could
count.

"How!?!" Jebediah screamed, "Where did those thrice-damned Sioux get
this kind of power?"

Nicodemus wasnt sure that this power was entirely Sioux. The shards of both
Caldwells and Malrogs spirits drifted up into the air, then flowed northeast
as if carried by a strong ethereal wind.

Toward Gulgoleth, he noted.

Other wisps emerged from the dead and dying, and were swept up into the current as
well, as Nicodemus finally realized what was happening. Nice work, Elijah, he commended.
Let us kill each other off, then claim our spirits as your own. But how did you do it?

Now, the real question: Did Nic care? Tzipporah was already inside the Mad
Prophets Lair, and could be contacted easily enough. She might even be able to kill
Elijah before his minions shredded her where she stood. But ultimately, would it matter?
And even if it did, was it a foregone conclusion that Elijahs plan would result in
the total devastation that Jebediah wanted so badly?

I believe Ill let this one ride, he decided, turning to leave. Death held no
terror for him, but dying to be part of a spirit battery for a religious zealot was not on
his agenda.

"Where are you going?" one of the Lost Angels screamed at him. "Stand
and fight, Whateley, or Ill kill you myself!"

"Mallory, isnt it?" Nicodemus asked off-handedly. "I believe this
is for you." A card spun off the top of his deck of its own volition, cutting through
the air and into her throat. The impact threw her back and off her horse. She landed,
hard, on the bloodied earth, her spirit already rising into the ethereal stream.

That had to hurt, chuckled Nicodemus. Tipping his bowler to her raging spirit, he
stepped over the body and headed for Gulgoleth. The time of Elijahs "Last
Kingdom" must be close, and maybe he could reach it in time to see the fireworks.

Tuesday - 9:51 a.m.

"The time to strike is now, Brigadier-General," Kerry insisted. "Father
Terrance says that we cant wait any longer."

Patterson observed the gunfighter carefully. "You also said the explosives will go
off at the top of the hour. Why not let the blast do the job? We keep them bottled up, and
the explosion brings the mesa down around them."

Arizona Jane practically stamped her feet in frustration. "We dont know that
the explosives will even dent those ruins. Besides, Elijahs followers might already
have found them. We cant take the risk."

Killer Kerry nodded her agreement. "Shes right. The Union forces were hit
the hardest, a couple days ago, and you wouldnt work with them anyway "

"Quite right, madam!"

" our men are holding the town, and the Sheriffs men are
restraining the looters. The Collegium are working for themselves now, or so Im
told, and the Sioux are busy with Elijahs remaining followers in Gomorra. That
leaves you."

Patterson considered her words, but his thoughts were interrupted as an unearthly
howling flowed through the air. "Whaaatt?!?" he exclaimed, glancing up as a
ghostly white stream of energy drifted through the air, from Gomorra toward Gulgoleth.

An army of the dead marched north from Gomorra, some clad in the tattered remains of
Confederate uniforms, most in common street clothes. Jane thought shed seen some of
them walking the streets of Gomorra over the last year or so before the undertakers
had hauled them off to Elephant Hill.

Slade raised a bugle to his lips and tried to suck in a breath of wind. He only
partially succeeded, as more air hissed out of the gaping holes in his chest than into the
horn. Still, the signal went out loud enough to be heard across the field, and the
lurching corpses fell into ranks behind Pattersons human commanders.

"Hes just as crazy as they say he is," Kerry said.

Jane looked as nervous as Kerry had ever seen her. Who knows? Maybe crazys just
what we need right now, she thought.

Tuesday - 9:58 a.m.

Enrique never planned to leave Elijahs lair alive: the mission was suicidal from
the start. His duty was to the Church, and he had accepted it gladly. But he intended for
his death to mean something.

Elijah was consumed with the ritual at the moment, leaving his personal safety to Cain
and Abel, who never left his side. Sister Mercy also remained nearby, and the sultry
Whateley gunslinger kept a respectable distance, watching the spectacle in silence.

Elijah looked up, out of the hollow mesa and into the morning sky. "Lord God
Almighty," he rasped, raising his hands into the air, "give your power unto
me!" As if on cue, a white column of energy pierced the sky and engulfed him.
Everyone in the room knew to expect a display of power, but this image was stunning, and
they withdrew from the searing energy, even though it gave off no heat. Cain and Abel fell
prostrate on the floor, their arms outstretched in reverence to the power of their Lord,
though Alonso knew that this display had nothing to do with the Divine.

The Prophet chanted in some language that even Enrique, for all his schooling,
didnt recognize, then suddenly paused. "SISTER MERCY!" he cried out.
"ATTEND ME!"

The Lost Angel stepped forward. "Brother! What can I do in this, your moment of
transcendence?"

Elijah smiled proudly upon her. "YOU CAN DIE!" With a casual motion, he
reached forward, thrusting his hand into her chest. There was no mark, no sign of ripping
or tearing: Elijahs hand simply passed through the skin and yanked back with a
grisly ripping noise. His fist throbbed and Alonso, only now working through his shock,
realized that he had torn the womans heart clear from her chest!

For a silent, impossible moment, Winters stared into her leaders eyes, then
crumpled slowly to the ground.

"BROTHER ENRIQUE! ATTEND ME!"

Alonso froze.

The silence in the room was palpable, and Alonso knew that his time had come. If he
were to make his mark, it would have to be now. Reaching into his robes, he clasped the
pistol hed smuggled into the lair and

fell backward as the entire mesa was rocked to its very foundations.

Artillery fire, Alonso noted. Father Terrance to the rescue!

Tzipporah, sensing things were falling apart, ran for the entrance and disappeared up
the tunnel. Cain and Abel rose, only to be knocked to their feet again as Elijahs
precious "Sabtabiels Remains" exploded outward into the heart of the mesa.

Perhaps today isnt such a good day to die after all, thought Enrique, as Cain and
Abel dove forward, into the pillar of white light surrounding Elijah. There was a flash,
and they were gone, vanished. Elijah himself was fading, as if he was slowly winking out
of existence, and Enrique thought he saw the Prophet glance knowingly in his direction.

I suppose, if its the only option, he thought, diving after the Angels. As he hit
the white light, he felt a shock of intense pain and then nothing, absolute numbness, as
he was lifted up and away from the fireball that consumed the mesas center. One
second, Sister Mercys body lay on the ritual site, torn and bloodied, and the next
it was reduced to so much ash and blown away, rolled into the fierce blast.

Alonso felt himself lifted up, his body now completely weightless. Am I dead, he
wondered. Is this

Glancing up, he saw Elijah, Cain, and Abel. More to the point, he saw through them as
they rose through the devastation, rocks harmlessly passing through them and fire licking
harmlessly at their transparent images.

"Do not fear, my son," Elijah said to Alonso. The Prophets voice was
uncharacteristically soothing and warm. "We are at the cusp of a new
world "

"But," Enrique asked, more with his mind than his voice, "the ritual
failed."

Elijah smiled. "Far from it, Enrique. You are very nearly ready to understand the
truth. Very nearly, and yet a lifetime away "

Torn between survival and duty, Enrique did as he was asked, and found that the horrors
of the real world paled to those in the one beyond. His silent, spiritual cries tore
through the heavens

Tuesday - 10:00 a.m.

The horde of Angels came soaring out of the mesa entrances, descending onto the
approaching horde of walkin dead. Patterson, in the lead, parried the thrust of a
flaming sword and stabbed beneath it, causing the blonde "angel" who struck at
him to backpedal furiously before collapsing into his kin.

"Men or angels, kill them all!" Patterson screamed, and the undead surged
forward, grabbing at anything foolish enough to pass within their reach. Artillery shells
flew through the air overhead, impacting on the mesa walls. The best placed attacks
garnered minor avalanches, which rolled off the cliff side and clouded the battlefield,
shrouding the warriors in a haze of brown.

Moments later, the scene was shaken by a huge explosion from within the mesa. Everyone
on the field - dead, living and angelic alike - froze in their tracks as huge gouts of
flame shot from every entrance into the central Gulgoleth mesa. Fallen who were close to
the mounds cavern mouths were lost in the blast, incinerated where they flew. Rocks
and debris rained down onto the final battleground, crushing angel and soldier alike.

Patterson wheeled his horse around and kicked it to a gallop, yanking the reins hard to
avoid a massive boulder rolling off the mesa foundation. He watched the skies above him,
searching for an angel moving with purpose. When he found one, he followed it, ordering
neighboring troops to follow, and picked up the pace to keep up with it. As he suspected,
the creature rode through an opening in the debris, then soared up and out of sight.

Buggers have their uses, he mused grimly.

The Brigadier-General wheeled his horse around just as the mesa let forth a final,
lingering groan and collapsed inward, caving in upon itself. More rock and debris flew
out, killing the survivors too bold or too stupid to steer clear of the area.

It took nearly a minute, but when it was over, Gulgoleth was a pile of rubble on the
field.

Tuesday - 11:03 a.m.

From his temporary command post, Patterson surveyed the smoldering ruin of Gulgoleth
with dismay. He had sustained massive casualties among his undead soldiers, who, for the
most part, were too slow to make it out in time. Not that he missed them personally, but
without their support, the Confederacy was vastly outnumbered by the other forces in
Gomorra.

So much for military conquest, he concluded.

Sergeant Slade was missing in action, but the man was a survivor. The Brigadier-General
had a team searching for him now, though he was half inclined to believe the man would
make his own way home. His adjutant would be back at his side shortly, of that Patterson
had no doubt.

Dexter Simpson had been in contact via the gadget that Zarkov and Miss Harris had
built, vouching the Rangers complete support, but Patterson was sure that the covert
operatives were against him. Especially now that they knew of his "secret
weapon", he was sure hed made another enemy.

Sighing, Patterson turned away from the battlefield.

Only one thing left to do, he noted.

"Ladies," he said, mustering what little Southern charm he could
as he approached the Sweetrock gunfighters, "Miss Kerry, Miss Jane. My apologies. I
hope you can understand how heavily this defeat weighs on my soul."

"Not a defeat," Kerry corrected him. "Elijah is dead, buried under tons
of rock. The Lost Angels have scattered. And, unless I miss my guess, youre the hero
of the hour - with a little help from us frontier folks, that is."

"Perhaps. But you must understand that from my perspective, and more importantly,
that of my superiors, this whole campaign has been a loss. Whats left for Dixie
Rails to occupy? Several tons of unstable rubble thatll be burning for years.
Weve neither the manpower nor the resources to salvage anything of use from
this."

"True. But Union Blue wont get it. Neither will Hellstromme, Kang, or
Devlin."

"Well, there is that, isnt there?" Patterson admitted. "In any
case, ladies, I must take my leave. My thanks for your assistance, and tender my regards
to Mr. Baine. I shall look forward to meeting him when things have settled down."

With that, Patterson tugged at his uniform, climbed atop his horse, and began the ride
back to Gomorra.

"Well, that went about as well as could be expected," commented Jane.

"Yep. Sweetrock holds most of Gomorra, weve got the resources close at hand
to salvage Gulgoleth without much outside help, and were still on good terms with
the Sioux."

"You really think thats the last well see of Elijah?"

"I hope so, Jane. But this is the second time weve had this conversation,
now isnt it?"

Epilogue - Tomorrow

Megan Mallory woke with a start, bolting up to a sitting position in the clutching
mist. The ground felt clammy beneath her palms, and she recoiled from the oddly slick
surface she was resting on. Instinctively pulling herself into a fetal position, she
rocked back and forth, her eyes adjusting to the sudden darkness around her.

Where am I, she wondered. The last thing I remember

Her hand flew to her throat and she swallowed, just to check, then pulled her hand back
in horror, not believing what she felt there.

Its not possible.

"Are you alright?"

Mallory jumped at the unexpected voice in the freakish wilderness, reaching for her gun
and twirling on its source, only to come face to face with a little girl of perhaps nine,
dressed in a soiled white dress and matching bonnet.

"Thats not gonna work," the child giggled.

What the Hell is a little girl doing in a place like this? she wondered, re-holstering
her weapon. "Whats your name?"

"They call me Lily."

"Alright, Lily," Megan said, as calmly as she could manage. "Where are
we?"

"Whos there?" Mallory called, her hand back on her pistol, just in
case.

Too slowly, a figure crept through the mist, a man in his fifties wearing suspenders
and a short-brimmed, miners hat. He looked harmless enough, but Megan could make out
more silhouettes just behind him, approaching her, so she kept her hand where it was.

"My names John," the newcomer said, offering his hand in greeting. When
he spotted her stance and the position of her hand, he added, "Were all friends
here."

"You afraid, John?" Megan smiled. Maybe it will do some good after all

The miner laughed. "No, of course not."

"None of us are afraid here," another man said, exiting the mist, a robust
figure with an attractive shock of platinum blonde hair.

"Not anymore," another voice continued, this one female and known to Mallory.

"Mercy? Is that you?" the gunfighter called into the mist.

"None other," the Angel responded, stepping into sight. It was her - Sister
Mercy Winters - but her chest was splayed open, a gaping hole where her heart should be.

"Oh God! What happened?" Megan gasped.

"I was chosen," Winters answered. "As were you."

"I wasnt chosen! I was murdered! By that demon-huckster, Nicodemus!"

"Regardless, youre home now. And our being here means that the first step
has been taken."

"First steps? Toward what?"

"Look around you," John said. "Cant you see? It has begun."

"What?" Mallory asked, noting that the mist was falling back from the small
circle to reveal more and more of the surrounding landscape - and ring after ring of the
dead. Elijahs Deadly Sins and his guardian pets, Flim and Flam, an albino Collegium
chemist, a ritually scarred African warrior, a hulking, drooling gunslinger with a red and
white poka-dot scarf, missing the backside of his skull

The mist was consciously withdrawing now, exposing the local terrain, a vast, gnarled
bog - and the base of something that extended well out of sight above, a towering tree
which looked to be hundreds of feet across and decaying from the roots. On the boughs
above, she could hear voices, whispering cries on the wind, and raging, angry replies.

And she could see lights, waning on the upper branches, dancing around shadows and
tricks of the light. In a moment, one of the lights fell, fading as it approaching the
roots, its voice singled out and shrieking in terror for a brief moment, then silent as
another figure appeared on the twisted plain below.

"Every time one of them dies, or anyone in the Gomorra Valley dies, we grow
stronger," John said, holding his hands up to the gathering throngs on the plain.
"Soon, there will be too many of us, and too few of them, and we will spill out into
their world."

Megan, too stunned for words, stood frozen with horror, even as the numbness of death
took her a second time.